Category Archives: Football Players

Acculturation and Racialization (Seth Browner PCQ 1/16/14)

Racialization and the Last Temptation of Zinedine Zidane

I enjoyed this article because I felt it touched on several points that are salient to the study of global football. For example, the author in great detail elaborated on the influence that the media plays in the spread of global soccer more than ever before in the game’s history. It also delves into the 20th century advent of investigative journalism.

The media has incredible power over how audiences come into contact with sports. More than simply reporting, I believe the explosion of the mobile device era is equally as potent in information’s spread. I really give specific credit to the iPhone and iPad. The ease of using them, the accessibility of international news, and the almost uninterrupted internet connection makes them especially worthy of note. The iPhone popularized the smartphone craze. They are so widespread in the rich world. Even in the semi-peripheral tier of countries, Apple’s technology is influencing culture there.

Most significantly is the impact that globalized media wields over culture. Culture is being re-shaped and broken down. New trends and fads are materializing. I would say that soccer’s prominence in the United States is part of that materialization.

Continue reading

Cole PCQ 1/16/2014 Problems with 21st Century Football

Racism, Sexism, and International Migration in 21st Century Football

The football academies in the United Kingdom are an excellent example of how commercialized and global all aspects of the game have become.  These youth football academies were originally formed to propagate talented football players from an early age.  By having Premier League clubs sponsor these schools, these clubs got were able to keep the talent for themselves and in the UK.  Recently, other countries have followed the UK’s example, but with one key difference; from the start, they actively sought out young players from around the world for their academies.  These academies are also responsible for teaching the youth players workforce skills to fall back on in case their football dreams fall short.

By actively looking for and recruiting youth players from around the world, European football academies are embodying some of the founding ideas of the European Union.  Even if the extranational youth players do not make it in the big leagues, they become a part of that country’s workforce and contribute to its global image.   Continue reading

TIFO

From the age of six until my freshman year of high school i was into the game of soccer and played for my town along with a local club. One of my many accomplishments during this time was being chosen to try out for the Olympic Development Program. This relates to the reading because i went up against players from the northeast in tryouts for a position on this team.

http://www.usyouthsoccer.org/

Style and Identity PCQ 6

Lechner’s article focuses on the Dutch national team and their development of a “Dutch National Style” of football throughout the late 20th century. Lechner bases some of the Dutch resurgence in the late 20th century on the collective memory of earlier Dutch victories.  It can be drawn from our discussion about national myths that the Dutch victories of ’74 and ’78 are part of the foundation of Dutch soccer. The Dutch as a team know they are capable of this greatness, therefore blocking one of the first hurdles of attaining a championship, the preconceived notions of a teams limitations. Tying this back to the article of American exceptionalism, I feel that it is this preconceived notion of limitations that is hindering America in adopting the sport of soccer. Continue reading

Cole TIFO 1/14/2014

A Team Attitude

Franck Ribery’s third place finish in the competition for the 2014 Ballon d’Or is nothing to be taken lightly considering the first and second place finishers of Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi.  From the start of him finding out he was one of the three being considered for the trophy, he remained humble and expressed that he finds just being in the top three of the world is an honor enough.  Ribery also remarks that he “would rather win it all again with Bayern Munich and win the world title. That is what really matters. Of course, I would have liked to win the award, but what else could I have done than winning all trophies with Bayern?”  This team attitude is part of what makes Bayern Munich’s success so stable.

Marta’s Masterful Talents in Germany (Seth Browner TIFO 1/15/14)

Marta Skillfully Maneuvers towards Brazilian victory in Women’s World Cup

In the Women’s World Cup in Germany, the Brazilian women’s national team was set against the Norwegian women’s team in Wolfsburg. Although Norway has typically been a backwater European football power, the women’s game has enjoyed some success in international tournaments. Brazil, naturally, enjoys much prestige and respect at the very mention of soccer. However, the South American country’s athletic celebrity is a result of the efforts of the individual footballers that compete in canary yellow and vibrant blue. Marta reaffirms this pivotal truth through her talented display of competence over her Norwegian opposition. Her performances not only propelled Brazil to victory in this World Cup game, but caught the attention of the transnational soccer community as a adroit female athlete.

Female Athlete Reports on Treatment of Female Players in Brazil (Seth Browner TIFO 1/14/14)

Caitlin Fisher Condemns the Portrayal of Women Footballers in Brazil

Caitlin Fisher, a former US soccer player and Santos FC footballer, reports in this short video on the feminization of female players in the Brazilian women’s league.  A graduate of Harvard University, she currently works in collaboration with South American football players in various charity organizations meant to push for the expansion of the women’s game. In her discussion, Fisher acknowledges improvement in the public’s favorable perception of female soccer, yet does not fail to raise points where steps forward have yet to be taken. TEDTalks host a variety of commentators of which she is featured.

Women’s Soccer Improving in the United States (Seth Browner TIFO 1/10/14)

How Women’s Soccer has Grown in the United States

There is a universal note in inequality movements where improvement must acknowledged for the growth of any campaign. Women’s soccer in the United States, and abroad, is not any different. Since, the first women’s team played on a field in the United States in 1985, much progress has been made. Title IX legislation has expanded soccer programs for females at the university dramatically. Female soccer players had at one time been as celebrated profiles as athletes like Ryan Lochte and Mariano Rivera. Mia Hamm and Joy Fawcett boasted numerous sponsorships and captured the adulation of a generation of Americans. The US women’s team has never a slot lower than second in FIFA’s international rankings- something the US men’s team would adore. However, there’s work to be done. WUSA discontinued due to low attendance and investors look askance at the worthwhileness of pouring money into a women’s  league in this country, blogger Julian Cardillo reports.  But, headway has been made.

http://www.boston.com/sports/soccer/blog/2013/04/in_100_years_wo.html

Fascism: Good or Bad for Italian Football?

The two chapters of Simon Martin’s book ‘Football and Fascism: The National Game under Mussolini’ deal with the early influence of Fascism on the game in the 1920s and 1930s and their effect on the teams of the 1930s. Martin makes clear that Fascist Italy saw football as both a good and bad influence upon its people. The regime saw the incredible influence that the sport and its players had over the population. By reorganizing the league structures and making it marginally under the control of government appointed persons the Regime sought to use the sport as tool of unifying its people and exporting the virtues of Fascism to the rest of the world.

What I found particularly important was the new regulations that sought to limit the ‘rivalry’ factor between city teams. For a large period of its history Italy was comprised of city states which traded and warred with each other for centuries. It was only in the 1870s that these city-states were fleshed together to make modern Italy. Fast-forward to the 1920s and many of these old rivalries were revived through the cities’ respective teams. Many viewed the rivalries as beneficial for the teams as they provided a steady flow of fans to the stadiums.

However Mussolini’s government saw the potential danger of these rivalries fracturing the national identity of Italy, core to Fascism fundamental tenets. As football was one of the tools through which the new government would promote itself to the world having such fractures was detrimental to the countries image. After several incidents of unsportsmanlike conduct and potential riots arose, the new governing bodies moved to alleviate the high emotions that surrounded these rivalries. By decompressing these rivalries, an unprecedented growth in north-south play and player movement occurred within the newly established leagues. This invariably led to a healthier playing atmosphere as well as allowed competition to occur outside of strictly regional rivalries.

By attaching itself so closely to the development of the leagues Mussolini’s regime began inextricably tied with Italian football. As such, extra weight was added to Italy’s international play as it was representing not only the nation but the institution of Fascism. Italy’s subsequent World Cup wins in 1934 and 1938 helped to give credence to the Regime’s investment in the sport. However the team, representing the regime, suffered backlash as Fascism’s ugly side became more known throughout the world. Fascism’s obsession with nationalist pride prevented many of Italy’s finest players from taking to the field as well as prevented a beneficial flow of foreign talent. In the end Fascism was only able to marginally influence the beginnings of the Italian soccer leagues as its continued presence brought an unwanted negative attention.

 

Quotations

Football would be fatally condemned to degenerate into the trick of a money grabber, worthy of repressive police measures and the contempt of the citizens….Because it is a grave problem we are setting about resolving it in a Fascist manner: that is seriously.

In essence, league football had not changed beyond recognition, but the principle of a truly national competition had been established, even if it was still contested on a north-south basis. It was the first step in the regime’s unification…

While calcio was the perfect allegory for the merits of the idealized Fascist society, it failed to resolve — and thereby exposed — many of the contradictions that existed within the constructed Italian Fascist identity. 

Questions

Would modern leagues benefit from the same governmental oversight and restructuring as under Fascism?

 

 

 

 

 

TIFO 3: Racism Fears at Euro2012

This article, dated May 2012, highlights the fears of racism that cast a dark cloud in the run up to the 2012 European Cup. The Cup was hosted by both Poland and the Ukraine, countries known for xenophobia and racism. The article makes note of the effects racism has not only on the players but also on the fans and speculates how the Leagues, players and host nations will deal with any incidents.